Days after Denver Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams was murdered in downtown Denver in 2007, his team put up a $100,000 Crime Stoppers reward for information leading to his killer.

On April 30, Willie D. Clark was sentenced to life in prison plus 1,152 years for the murder and for the attempted murder of 16 others riding in the football star’s limousine on New Year’s Day 2007.

Denver police solved the case after receiving tips from prison inmates, Clark’s fellow gang members and drug dealers who testified against him.

Nearly six months after Clark’s conviction, homicide detectives have still not recommended to the Crime Stoppers board which tipster, if any, should receive the money.

Denver police spokesman Sonny Jackson said detectives won’t make a decision on who should get the payout because “cases that are intertwined with Clark’s case have not been adjudicated.”

Jackson declined to be specific about which cases are pending, but Clark and two of his associates are facing trials in the witness-killing of Kalonniann Clark (no relation), a woman who was shot to death just weeks before Williams.

In December 2006, Kalonniann Clark was days away from testifying against Brian Kenneth Hicks, who she claimed had shot at her outside a downtown nightclub the year before, when she was killed at her home in Denver.

Prosecutors describe Hicks as a gang leader and drug kingpin who ordered Willie Clark and other members of his gang to have her killed before she could testify.

Police say that Willie Clark and Shun Birch carried out the hit and that Birch was paid in high-grade marijuana to do the crime.

All three men will be tried separately.

Hicks will go on trial first in January. Birch’s trial follows in February. A trial date for Clark has not been set.

Jackson declined to say whether the same witnesses who testified against Clark in the Williams trial will be used again. Court records indicate at least three witnesses who are expected to receive plea deals in exchange for information in the Williams case will be testifying during the Kalonniann Clark trials.

Marquise Harris, a witness called by the defense during Willie Clark’s trial, has been vocal about his belief he is owed the $100,000 reward.

He intercepted a jailhouse confession letter he says was written by Willie Clark and continues to claim his actions solved the case.

Harris gave the letter to the Rocky Mountain News in 2008 and later turned it over to prosecutors.

But Clark’s defense team called Harris to the stand during the trial to show he had a pattern of lying to investigators. He also had trouble cooperating in the state witness protection program.

Defense lawyers claimed Harris cut and pasted the letter together to benefit from the $100,000 reward.

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